97 Iowa 279 | Iowa | 1896
— The defendants are Wolf & Oakes, a co-partnership, and Louis R. Wolf, and John Oakes, the partners who compose it. The petition alleges, that in the year 1881, the plaintiff was indebted in various sums, which aggregated not less than eight thousand, one hundred dollars. That the defendants became sureties for the plaintiff, on a promissory note, to the Johnson County Savings Bank, for the sum of four thousand dollars, a note to the Iowa County Bank (or Holbrook Bank) for one thousand, three hundred, and seventeen dollars, a second note to the Johnson County Savings Bank, amounting to seven hundred dollars, and a note, to John Hall, for
There are many errors in the printed record, which appear to be clerical, but are nevertheless confusing. They relate mainly to dates, amounts and designations of parties. We have endeavored to
The items with which the plaintiff charges the defendants, and which the latter admit, in substance, are as follows: September 3, 1881, cash, eight hundred and fifty dollars; December 26, 1881, cattle, four thousand, one hundred and eighty dollars and eleven cents; March 8,1882, stock, two thousand and twenty-six dollars, and ninety-nine cents; November, 1882, proceeds of hogs, three1 hundred dollars; March 7, 1883, cattle, one thousand, one hundred and ten dollars, and eighty-four cents; February 20,1885, proceeds of cattle, nine hundred and seventeen dollars, and eighty-seven cents; November, 1885, notes from cattle sale, nine hundred and twenty-six dollars. In addition, the defendants admit three hundred and fifty dollars of a charge of four hundred and seventy-five dollars for pasturing stock in the year 1882, one hundred and seventy-five dollars of a charge of three hundred and fifty dollars for sale notes, and one hundred and seventy dollars of a charge of one hundred and seventy-five dollars for hogs. They also claim credits to the amount of forty-five dollars on some of the charges which are admitted. In other words, the defendants are charged by the plaintiff with items to the amount of eleven thousand, three hundred and eleven dollars and eighty-one cents, of which they admit ten thousand, nine hundred and sixty-one dollars and eighty-one cents to be correct. The items charged by the defendants against the plaintiff, are as follows: June 21, 1881, cash loaned, four thousand dollars; July 9, 1881, cash paid Marengo Savings Bank, one thousand, three hundred and seventeen dollars and thirty-five cents; December 10, 1891, cash loaned, seven hundred dollars; January 1,1883, cash paid N. B. Holbrook, or bank at Marengo, four hundred
The chief contention between the parties is in regard to the cash item of four thousand dollars claimed by the defendants. It appears that on the twenty-first day of June, 1881, the plaintiff gave to the defendants, his note for four thousand dollars, payable on the first day of the next January. The defendants claim that this was for a loan of money to the amount of the note, made at that time, and paid directly to the plaintiff; while he insists that it was for payments on his account to be made thereafter to his creditors by the defendants, and that the payment of two thousand, seven hundred and eighty-eight dollars and eighteen cents to Hall, and one thousand, three hundred and seventeen dollars and thirty-five cents to the Marengo Savings Bank, were made on account of that
It is said that the plaintiff was mentally incapable of attending to his business after the latter part of the year 1882, when he became partially paralyzed, and that the documents relating to his business were kept from him. It appears that he was confined tc his bed during the first year or two that he became effected by paralysis, and that he was quite feeble, and